"Jimmie Driver and his Tennessee Playboys" band. Pictured are three guitar players, one fiddle player, one banjo player, a harmonica player, and a spoons player with each holding his instrument. The caption on the front of the photograph...

Completed form identifies the trooper as Pvt. Samuel W. Duncan, Co. M, 7th Penn. Cav. Regt. He was discharged from the Army at Macon, Georgia, on August 23, 1864, when he was 20 years old. The document identifies his height, complexion type, and;...

Harris served as 1st Lt., Co. A, 12th Tenn. Inf. Regt., CSA, also known as the Newbern Blues, under Col. Tyree Bell of Dyer County. He also served as Adjutant for Col. Robert Russell. Information on the back of the photograph identifies this as a...

Items include: piece of flag featuring Confederate cavalry General John Hunt Morgan's name, object identifies this as an "embroidered signature from his personal flag." Case also includes a signed receipt for the flag, a carte de visite of General...

Journalist and cartographer Henry Timberlake traveled to the Overhill Cherokee villages on the Little Tennessee river in late 1761 to explain the treaty signed at Fort Loudon to the Cherokees located there. He remained with the Cherokee until March...

On this two-sided "List of Men left in my charge Sick. Lame & wound out with fatigue," Dr. William Lawrence reports sixty-four unfit men. List includes not only their names, but it identifies their militia companies. Several deaths are noted at...

Published in Memphis (Tenn.), the author of this volume never identifies himself. The treatise is an odd conflation of Old Testament exegesis and the recent history of the civil war in "Jephatic Israel" or America. The subtitle is: "His normal...

This framed drawing of Rev. Matthew Martin Marshall (1804-1874) identifies him as the founder of the First Presbyterian Church in Union City, Tenn. During the Civil War, he was the minister of the First Presbyterian Church in Fayetteville, Tenn.;...

This free circular is subtitled, "A Letter for the Times." The author, George J. Jones, identifies himself as a scientist and an investigator. In this publication, Jones is countering the attacks directed at William Jennings Bryan for his...

This photographic print of four men identifies the man on the right from as being James Robert Payne with the rest being "cousins so far as we know." It further identifies the young man on the back row right as Judd Crutcher.

Unidentified seamen aboard the U.S.S. Rambler during convoy escort duty. The men are operating the ship's 3"/50 gun. The inscription on the photograph incorrectly identifies the ship as the U.S.S. Rumpler.